Observant readers may have noticed that Comment is free has lost the full stop at the end of its standfirsts. It's just one of the changes to the paper's house style that has accompanied the publication of an amended and updated edition of Guardian Style.

Many words, phrases and institutions that we are now familiar with were not around when The Guardian Stylebook was published in 2004 and a few things are now done slightly differently. As David Marsh, the editor of Guardian Style, wrote in today's Open Door column: "Over time, our house style has developed to reflect shifts in the English language and society itself."

The most significant and noticeable change is the "demise of honorifics". Marsh describes this as a practical and ideological move, which will do away with the categorisation of women as Ms, Miss and Mrs and clear up the debate over when a deceased person loses their honorific.

Does anything about the Guardian's style bother you? What would you like to change?